On a wet April morning we drove
up to the Cleveland Natural History Museum (CMNH), and what a drive it was. The
main road passes under majestic bridges and what seems to be a parkland lined
with monuments to numerous nations across the globe. The museum itself is not
near the centre of the city but about 8km outside the city centre in a complex filled
with schools and medical institutions.
What we could see of the entire precinct,
it looks fantastic (it really was raining hard when we were there). There are
great gardens to walk around and many items to investigate (such as a life-size stegosaurus), so please ensure you allocate some time to check the outside
as well as the inside.
Entering the museum from the car-park, you pass through an atrium filled with fantastic NASA images from the Hubble space telescope. I could have just stood there for hours and peered into these, but onward we marched.
In 2015 the CMNH announced a
major upgrade, with several phases of construction updating the displays and
increasing the floor space of the building. This work also included a
connecting car-park – and some of this work has been completed. This mean there
is a real old vs new feel to the CMNH – now as you will see this is not a
complaint, just an observation. What has been completed so far is great and so
I will be very interested to see what else they have planned (actually you can
see some concept art here https://www.cmnh.org/centennialhome/project-update/exhibit-update).
Approaching its centenary, the CMNH was planned to be an institution that concentrated on not just the
education side of the natural sciences, but to research and develop collections
in the fields of anthropology, archaeology, astronomy, botany, geology, palaeontology
and zoology, and this it seems to have done very well as the museum is
consistently ranked in the top ten natural history museums in the USA – and that’s
saying a lot as this place has a lot of natural history museums.
To me there are clear delineations in the
galleries of this museum, with each carrying a distinctive feel, almost a separate
personality to the rest that I will separate them here – something I never
really have done before.
Kirtland Hall of Prehistoric Life
This feels like the oldest part
of the museum, with some of the exhibits clearly of an older style. It is an
enormous space, and lining most of the walls are small displays containing
specimens from various times of Earth’s past. Though these are of an older
style, they are filled with some amazing specimens. There are plenty of Miocene
and Oligocene fossils, with skulls from Platybelodon, sabretooth cats, horses
and a great entelodont skull.
The star of this little section
though is Diatryma, a giant bird
unearthed in Wyoming. There are also a number of small mural/paintings in these
displays, though I could not see the artists name (to be fair, I may have just
missed it so if the artists is out there, please let me know and I’ll happily
re-edit this).
A large central island is behind
you at this point containing those most iconic of dinosaurs, a triceratops and
a T. rex (the Wankle Rex I do
believe). Behind the tail of this full-sized replica is also the skull of the
highly controversial Nanotyrannus. The skull (CMNH 7541) was first found in
1942 by David Hosbrook Dunkle and described four years later by Charles W.
Gilmore as Gorgosaurus lancensis.
This was later reinterpreted by Robert T. Bakker, Phil Currie, and Michael
Williams as a new, midget tyrannosaur species as features of this small skull
indicate it was from an adult – thus Nanotyrannus.
Trust me, we will come back to this conversation later.
These cabinets line bookend an enormous
wall where numerous fossils hang. Many of these are skulls, topping the silhouetted
shape of the animal they represent. Here there is also a great mosasaur on
display and I really like the way it was mounted as you get a great look inside
its mouth at the palate teeth (a feature you often cannot see with museum mounts).
Out of the far corner juts
another of these ‘islands’, and here you can see a real treasure. Happy the Haplocanthosaurus was a Jurassic
sauropod, and at 66ft was one of the smallest found in the Morrison formation.
2. This is the only mount of this species anywhere in the world.
3. It is one of the most
primitive sauropods known and exactly what it was related too is still being
discussed.
4. There is no getting around it...the
tail.
Happy has been on display since
1963, when our view of dinosaurs was drastically different than today. The preparators
placed happy in the stance of the day, with its tail dragging on the ground,
and today this stance is still presence. It’s an amazing site to see, - you case
how the tail would be dislocated in two places if this was how the tail was
while the animal was alive.
As Pointed out earlier though,
there are changes coming to the museum and I assume the specimen will surely
get a modern remounting – and I am not sure how I feel about that. I understand
a museum will always want to place the most scientifically accurate information
in front of a visitor – but – having been a museum educator for several decades
in museums across the globe, I love the story a tour guide gets to present with
such a feature. This is a physical opportunity to explain how science adapts to
new information, technology and ideas. In a very real way it will be a lost
opportunity when (if) this mount gets changed.
Next to Happy is also a mounted Allosaurus, and the way these two
species are presented are great. Unearthed in the local Cleveland-Lloyd Quarry (along
with 44 other specimens), Alice the Allosaurus has been mounted running along
the side of its far larger victim which it seems to be preparing to attack. Originally
Alice had also been built with her tail dragging on the ground – and in 2008 the
fossil (which is around 50% real) was remounted with a modern stance.
The rest of the room is made up
of more cabinets containing older species – such as one of the most complete Coelophysis mounted skeletons on display
(sorry no image) and then a lot of Triassic and Permian species such as Dimetrodon. A great little touch is, if
you look closely, it is here you will see the modern Tuatara – making the link
between this living fossil and the time.
Being that this is Cleveland,
there is an extensive display of Devonian fossils, especially sharks and the
famous armoured-head placoderm fish like Dunkleosteus.
As the region is known for such fossils there are numerous species and growth sizes -as well as a life-size model swimming above your head.
As the region is known for such fossils there are numerous species and growth sizes -as well as a life-size model swimming above your head.
It is here that you find another dinosaur
specimen the museum is famous for, and this brings me to one of the real treats
of my visit. The Staff at the CMNH are fantastic, warm, friendly and knowledge and
they were happy to chat and show me some of the treasures they have sitting in their
backrooms.
A huge shout out to Ashley Hall (Adult Programs Coordinator) and Lee Hall (Fossil Preparator and Lab Manager) who were most fantastic hosts and later (when we bumped into the Curator and Head of the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology for the museum) Dr. Michael Ryan. You guys are the best and what a happy and fun environment to be working in. You can always get a sense of an institution by the people who work there, and thanks to you guys, as Drew Carey once noted, CLEVELAND ROCKS!
A huge shout out to Ashley Hall (Adult Programs Coordinator) and Lee Hall (Fossil Preparator and Lab Manager) who were most fantastic hosts and later (when we bumped into the Curator and Head of the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology for the museum) Dr. Michael Ryan. You guys are the best and what a happy and fun environment to be working in. You can always get a sense of an institution by the people who work there, and thanks to you guys, as Drew Carey once noted, CLEVELAND ROCKS!
During the tour out in the storage
rooms the guys explained how they run some of their education programs and what
they are planning for the future I got to see a number of amazing things.
As mentioned, thanks to the Cleveland
Shale, the CMNH has an extensive collection of Devonian fossils, especially
from enormous predatory fish like Dunkleosteus.
The museum has numerous remains from these fish in storage, and work on them is
ongoing. Watch this space as one of these specimens seems to be from an enormous,
fanged or sabre-toothed placoderm that could have been even more impressive than
the species already described.
One of the great things I got to
see was the original skull of Nanotyrannus.
The fossil is a thing of beauty, the colour alone makes it one of the better-looking
fossils I have seen, which brings me back to the argument about it being a
valid species or just a juvenile T.rex.
The dinosaur sitting in the foyer is a cast of Jane, the juvenile T.rex. Its discovery was used as proof that
the museums original skull was also a juvenile and that was apparently that. Recently
though there have been some scientists holding onto the idea the Cleveland
skull is a separate species, and its labelling remains true to the original name.
Having bid a fond farewell to my
guides Ashley and Lee, it was back to exploring.
Reinberger Hall of Astronomy and Wade Gallery of Gems & Jewels
Here is where the museum takes a
series turn with its exhibits. By the feel these are new and well though out. As
many of you in the industry are aware, the geology side of a display is often
the least visited – sure people love the jewels and some of the more spectacular
minerals, but they generally don’t spend a lot of time here.
These displays are fantastic. Not
only are there numerous interactives and media displays, with great looking
murals clearly and simply explaining how the planet was formed, what you would
expect to see on other planets, how erosion works, how soil is formed and how
you can tell the difference between various dirt, why rocks and fossils are important
in this modern world, mineral properties and how mines operate.
You pass through cave systems, reconstructed mines and what looks to be the set from a Star Trek episode for the astronomy section, with space-age shaped window displays, scrolling futuristic video screens and wall to roof mounted Hubble images. These walls are colour coded, with a deep ochre for geology and a cool blue for space.
You pass through cave systems, reconstructed mines and what looks to be the set from a Star Trek episode for the astronomy section, with space-age shaped window displays, scrolling futuristic video screens and wall to roof mounted Hubble images. These walls are colour coded, with a deep ochre for geology and a cool blue for space.
These galleries lead you to the temporary
exhibit display, where the CMNH is currently housing a touring pterosaur display. I will cover this later in its own page.
“Set a course for adventure in this Museum-created exhibit celebrating
the fabled voyage of the Blossom. Explore tales of mutiny, adventure and
discovery as you experience the expedition that built the Museum’s collections
nearly a century ago.” That’s how
the museums website describe another exhibit focusing on the history of not
just the collection, but how it was collected. There are numerous historical items,
including journals, tools, maps and artworks from the CMNH’s voyage of exploration
in the 1920s.
Sears Hall of Human Ecology
Wow. For many museums the issue
is often how do you create space to display all the items you have in storage
that visitors might wish to see? Well the CMNH has come up with a novel way of
achieving this, double-stacking.
Though this room is not the
largest, it has a high ceiling, and so it seems the exhibits designers hit on
the novel idea of just stacking one exhibit on top of another. This is a unique
approach, and yes there are other museums that have done something similar,
none have taken it to this extent. I personally loved it, it was almost like
looking at a children’s popup book, with each angle creating a new way to see
the items displayed.
The display cleverly uses animals
in dynamic poses, cultural backgrounds, and recreated environments – placed within
the continents or surroundings where they live. This sort of display also
creates something new, a two tier visit dynamic. While some are busy looking at
the items on display within the lower cabinets, others move into the middle of
the room so they can see what is above better.
Apparently these displays date back several decades and have not been upgraded, they were just so well done the first time around that they have been kept. This is a surprise to me as they really did feel new and cutting edge.
At various times there were also staff members walking around with live animals that visitors could interact with. This included a snapping turtle and a skunk that comes out at set times throughout the day.
Apparently these displays date back several decades and have not been upgraded, they were just so well done the first time around that they have been kept. This is a surprise to me as they really did feel new and cutting edge.
At various times there were also staff members walking around with live animals that visitors could interact with. This included a snapping turtle and a skunk that comes out at set times throughout the day.
Ohio Archaeology and Human
Origins Gallery
A small display of local archaeological
items leads you towards the end of your visit inside with a visit to the
museums new Human Origins gallery. The CMNH has a long history of anthropology and
primatology and its collection is vast. The Human Origins Gallery is one of those
that has recently been upgraded, and focuses on Lucy, that tiny little Australopithecus
that had been unearthed by the museum’s curator, Donald Johanson, and his team
in 1874 while they were exploring Ethiopia. This was arguably the world’s most
famous anthropology discovery and a real feather in the museum’s cap – so its
no wonder this display was one of the first to get an upgrade.
As with most African fossils of
this sort, the originals are stored in Ethiopia, but a displayed replica
skeleton cast from the original bones is on display, standing alongside a lifelike
sculpture created by renowned paleoartist, John Gurche.
And that was about it for our
visit. There are many other places to explore in the museum, such as a walk
through the Ralph Perkins II Wildlife Center & Woods Garden (which I missed
due to the rain).
Overall, the museum deserves its
place in the top ten US natural history museums and I encourage you all to
visit and say hi.
Other items either soon to be
placed on display or I missed due to time.
- BALTO - The hero dog of Nome, Alaska, who in 1925 helped led a team of sled dogs through the snow to this distant outpost, carrying much needed medical supplies.
- The Nathan and Fannye Shafran Planetarium & Ralph Mueller Observatory. Here you can learn about astronomy and on certain nights visit the observatory to peer at the universe (check their website for opening times).
- On the way back into the city there is a fantastic whale mural that covers a large building, so keep an eye out for that.